Tahrir al-Sharm turning to Syria's antiquities to compensate lack of Turkish finance
Tahrir al-Sham, one of the largest militias in northern Syria, faces a difficult financial crisis due to a drop in Turkish financial support to it.
To make up for this
drop in support, Tahrir al-Sham is turning to the theft of Syrian antiquities.
It is even searching for the antiquities in the areas in controls in
preparation for selling them.
Tahrir al-Sham recently
used its bulldozers to search an area in Afes village, which is located in
Idlib province, claiming that it was doing this to remove dust barriers away
from main roads.
The bulldozers were in
effect searching for antiquities in the area.
According to the
London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Tal Nawaz, which is located
near Kafr Naseh town in the western countryside of Aleppo, has turned into an
excavation site.
Tahrir al-Sham uses
equipment to remove layers of ground and dig for antiquities, the observatory
said.
It added that the
militia had already found ancient pieces in several areas.
Syrian political
activist, Rayan Maarouf, referred to a drop in financial support to Tahrir al-Sham
for several months now.
He said the drop
especially happened after the Covid-19 outbreak around the world.
"This is why the
militia is turning to looting and theft," Maarouf said.
He told The Reference
that Turkey had assigned some of its officers in northern Syria to buy the
antiquities Tahrir al-Sham and other militias unearth.
The same officers also
get these antiquities out of Syria.
"Turkey is the
prime instigator behind all this," Maarouf said.



